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Volatile Compositions of Panax ginseng and Panax quinquifolium Grown for Different Cultivation Years

Yejin Kim, Jung-Woo Lee, Ick-Hyun Jo, Nayeong Kwon, Donghwi Kim, Jong‐Wook Chung, Kyong-Hwan Bang, Jeehye Sung

2022Foods15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

(American ginseng) grown for different cultivation years by using HS-SPME/GC-MS and determined the key discriminant volatile compounds by chemometric analysis including principal component analysis (PCA), hierarchical cluster analysis (HCA), and partial least squares-discrimination analysis (PLS-DA). Fifty-six compounds, including forty terpenes, eight alcohols, one alkane, one ketone, and one furan, were identified in the ginseng roots. The chemometric results identified two major clusters of American ginseng and Korean ginseng cultivars with distinct volatile compositions. The volatile compounds in fresh white ginseng roots were affected by the species, but the influence of different cultivation ages was ambiguous. The major volatile components of ginseng roots are terpenes, including monoterpenes and sesquiterpenes. In particular, panaginsene, ginsinsene, α-isocomene, and caryophyllene were predominant in Korean ginseng cultivars, whereas β-farnesene levels were higher in American ginseng. The difference in volatile patterns between Panax ginseng and Panax quinquefolium could be attributed to the composition of sesquiterpenes such as β-panaginsene, ginsinsene, caryophyllene, and β-farnesene.

Topics & Concepts

GinsengTerpeneAmerican ginsengAraliaceaeChemistryTraditional medicineBotanyFood scienceBiologyStereochemistryMedicinePathologyAlternative medicineGinseng Biological Effects and ApplicationsFood Quality and Safety StudiesFermentation and Sensory Analysis